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they have caught; therefore will I hasten on before; and get ready
fire and water and other matters for the cooking。 Wilt thou come
with me; young master; or abide thy men here?〃
Walter said lightly: 〃I will rest and abide them here; since I
cannot fail to see them hence as they go on their ways to thine
house。 And it may be well that I be at hand to command them and
forbid; and put some order amongst them; for rough playmates they
be; some of them; and now all heated with the hunting and the joy of
the green earth。〃 Thus he spoke; as if nought were toward save
supper and bed; but inwardly hope and fear were contending in him;
and again his heart beat so hard; that he deemed that the carle must
surely hear it。 But the old man took him but according to his
outward seeming; and nodded his head; and went away quietly toward
his house。
When he had been gone a little; Walter rose up heedfully; he had
with him a scrip wherein was some cheese and hard…fish; and a little
flasket of wine; a short bow he had with him; and a quiver of
arrows; and he was girt with a strong and good sword; and a wood…
knife withal。 He looked to all this gear that it was nought amiss;
and then speedily went down off the mound; and when he was come
down; he found that it covered him from men coming out of the wood;
if he went straight thence to that shard of the rock…wall where was
the pass that led southward。
Now it is no nay that thitherward he turned; and went wisely; lest
the carle should make a backward cast; and see him; or lest any
straggler of his own folk might happen upon him。
For to say sooth; he deemed that did they wind him; they would be
like to let him of his journey。 He had noted the bearings of the
cliffs nigh the shard; and whereas he could see their heads
everywhere except from the depths of the thicket; he was not like to
go astray。
He had made no great way ere he heard the horns blowing all together
again in one place; and looking thitherward through the leafy boughs
(for he was now amidst of a thicket) he saw his men thronging the
mound; and had no doubt therefore that they were blowing on him; but
being well under cover he heeded it nought; and lying still a
little; saw them go down off the mound and go all of them toward the
carle's house; still blowing as they went; but not faring scatter…
meal。 Wherefore it was clear that they were nought troubled about
him。
So he went on his way to the shard; and there is nothing to say of
his journey till he got before it with the last of the clear day;
and entered it straightway。 It was in sooth a downright breach or
cleft in the rock…wall; and there was no hill or bent leading up to
it; nothing but a tumble of stones before it; which was somewhat
uneasy going; yet needed nought but labour to overcome it; and when
he had got over this; and was in the very pass itself; he found it
no ill going: forsooth at first it was little worse than a rough
road betwixt two great stony slopes; though a little trickle of
water ran down amidst of it。 So; though it was so nigh nightfall;
yet Walter pressed on; yea; and long after the very night was come。
For the moon rose wide and bright a little after nightfall。 But at
last he had gone so long; and was so wearied; that he deemed it
nought but wisdom to rest him; and so lay down on a piece of
greensward betwixt the stones; when he had eaten a morsel out of his
satchel; and drunk of the water out of the stream。 There as he lay;
if he had any doubt of peril; his weariness soon made it all one to
him; for presently he was sleeping as soundly as any man in Langton
on Holm。
CHAPTER VIII: WALTER WENDS THE WASTE
Day was yet young when he awoke: he leapt to his feet; and went
down to the stream and drank of its waters; and washed the night off
him in a pool thereof; and then set forth on his way again。 When he
had gone some three hours; the road; which had been going up all the
way; but somewhat gently; grew steeper; and the bent on either side
lowered; and lowered; till it sank at last altogether; and then was
he on a rough mountain…neck with little grass; and no water; save
that now and again was a soft place with a flow amidst of it; and
such places he must needs fetch a compass about; lest he be mired。
He gave himself but little rest; eating what he needs must as he
went。 The day was bright and calm; so that the sun was never
hidden; and he steered by it due south。 All that day he went; and
found no more change in that huge neck; save that whiles it was more
and whiles less steep。 A little before nightfall he happened on a
shallow pool some twenty yards over; and he deemed it good to rest
there; since there was water for his avail; though he might have
made somewhat more out of the tail end of the day。
When dawn came again he awoke and arose; nor spent much time over
his breakfast; but pressed on all he might; and now he said to
himself; that whatsoever other peril were athwart his way; he was
out of the danger of the chase of his own folk。
All this while he had seen no four…footed beast; save now and again
a hill…fox; and once some outlandish kind of hare; and of fowl but
very few: a crow or two; a long…winged hawk; and twice an eagle
high up aloft。
Again; the third night; he slept in the stony wilderness; which
still led him up and up。 Only toward the end of the day; himseemed
that it had been less steep for a long while: otherwise nought was
changed; on all sides it was nought but the endless neck; wherefrom
nought could be seen; but some other part of itself。 This fourth
night withal he found no water whereby he might rest; so that he
awoke parched; and longing to drink just when the dawn was at its
coldest。
But on the fifth morrow the ground rose but little; and at last;
when he had been going wearily a long while; and now; hard on
noontide; his thirst grieved him sorely; he came on a spring welling
out from under a high rock; the water wherefrom trickled feebly
away。 So eager was he to drink; that at first he heeded nought
else; but when his thirst was fully quenched his eyes caught sight
of the stream which flowed from the well; and he gave a shout; for
lo! it was running south。 Wherefore it was with a merry heart that
he went on; and as he went; came on more streams; all running south
or thereabouts。 He hastened on all he might; but in despite of all
the speed he made; and that he felt the land now going down
southward; night overtook him in that same wilderness。 Yet when he
stayed at last for sheer weariness; he lay down in what he deemed by
the moonlight to be a shallow valley; with a ridge at the southern
end thereof。
He slept long; and when he awoke the sun was high in the heavens;
and never was brighter or clearer morning on the earth than was
that。 He arose and ate of what little was yet left him; and drank
of the water of a stream which he had followed the evening before;
and beside which he had laid him down; and then set forth again with
no great hope to come on new tidings that day。 But yet when he was
fairly afoot; himseemed that there was something new in the air
which he brea